BLACK-CAPPED VIREO

KANSAS:

FEDERAL:

Scientific Name: Vireo atricapilla

CATEGORY:

SPECIES CLASS: Birds

Date Listed:
E 1987; Unlisted 2015

Recovery Plan:
No

Bob Gress

SPECIES DESCRIPTION

The Black-capped Vireo is about 5 inches long. Males have olive green backs, white undersides, and faintly yellowish green flanks. The upper half of the head is black with white lores and partial eye-ring giving the appearance of white spectacles. The eye is brownish red and the bill black. Females are duller colored with a more gray head and the underside washed with greenish yellow.

Historical nesting records are known only from Comanche County, however, the bird likely nested in suitable habitat throughout the Red (Gyp) Hills region in southcentral Kansas. Preferred habitat is low dense tree-shrub growth in ravines in native prairie. Although sight records from Harvey and Rice counties are documented, there have been no records of the bird in the state since 1953. Its current probable range is limited to Barber, Clark, and Comanche counties. Occurrences outside of that three-county area would be considered accidental.

SPECIES PROTECTION AND CRITICAL HABITATS:

Black-capped Vireos are protected by the Kansas Nongame and Endangered Species Conservation Act, the Federal Endangered Species Act, and state and federal regulations applicable to those acts. Any time an eligible project is proposed that will impact the species' preferred habitats within its probable range, the project sponsor must contact the Ecological Services Section, Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism, 512 SE 25th Ave., Pratt, Kansas 67124-8174. Department personnel can then advise the project sponsor on permit requirements. Sponsors of projects impacting Black-capped Vireo habitats must also contact the Endangered Species Specialist, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 315 Houston Street, Suite E, Manhattan, Kansas 66502.

DESIGNATED CRITICAL HABITATS

As defined by Kansas Administrative Regulations, critical habitats include those areas documented as currently supporting self-sustaining population(s) of any threatened or endangered species of wildlife as well as those areas determined by the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism to be essential for the conservation of any threatened or endangered species of wildlife.

Black-capped Vireos are most likely to occur as summer visitants or residents in southcentral counties. At present, no specific locations have been designated critical.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service also has authority to designate areas of critical habitat for federally listed endangered species, but has not done so for Black-capped Vireos in Kansas.

The following counties contain critical habitat for BLACK-CAPPED VIREO: